Breaking News

Breaking News

Author: Associated Press

Publisher: Princeton Architectural Press

Published: 2007-05-04

Total Pages: 454

ISBN-13: 9781568986890

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Uses personal accounts, archival materials, interviews, and Pulitzer-Prize-winning photographs to document AP's groundbreaking role in providing the news to the international and American press.


War and Peace News

War and Peace News

Author: Lucinda Broadbent

Publisher:

Published: 1985

Total Pages: 384

ISBN-13:

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This book analyses television images of peace and war. The first section looks at teevision reporting on the Falklands conflict while defence and disarmament news is examined in the second section.


Story-Formed Pathways to Peace

Story-Formed Pathways to Peace

Author: Dalton Reimer

Publisher: Xlibris Corporation

Published: 2018-09-11

Total Pages: 199

ISBN-13: 1984550438

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The Book Story-Formed Pathways to Peace calls readers to action around a single vision—making peace a reality. It draws on the unexpected power of stories to transform the world. The stories retold here have resonated through the ages not only with those religious but also with thinkers, artists, musicians, and others who have seen in them universal patterns of behavior. Now retold with commentary as seen through the lens of conflict and peacemaking, they illuminate pathways to peace as relevant today as when first told. Each chapter is fronted with imagined headlines of the ancient story with actual parallel headlines from the present, thus highlighting this connection of past and present. It is then in going back that pathways toward peace are illuminated for the present and future. The wisdom tradition of sacred texts is hereby extended.


The News Media and Peace Processes

The News Media and Peace Processes

Author: Gadi Wolfsfeld

Publisher:

Published: 2001

Total Pages: 56

ISBN-13:

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The news media can play a central role in the promotion of peace. The role of the media does vary, however, and both researchers and practitioners must better understand the reasons for these variations. This report points to four major factors that impact this equation: (1) the amount of consensus among political elites in support of the peace process; (2) the number and intensity of crises associated with the process; (3) the extent to which shared media, used by both sides of the conflict, exist; and (4) the level of sensationalism as a dominant news value. The first two variables tells us something about the state of the political environment, while the final two relate to the media environment.


Debating War and Peace

Debating War and Peace

Author: Jonathan Mermin

Publisher: Princeton University Press

Published: 1999-07-01

Total Pages: 175

ISBN-13: 1400823323

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The First Amendment ideal of an independent press allows American journalists to present critical perspectives on government policies and actions; but are the media independent of government in practice? Here Jonathan Mermin demonstrates that when it comes to military intervention, journalists over the past two decades have let the government itself set the terms and boundaries of foreign policy debate in the news. Analyzing newspaper and television reporting of U.S. intervention in Grenada and Panama, the bombing of Libya, the Gulf War, and U.S. actions in Somalia and Haiti, he shows that if there is no debate over U.S. policy in Washington, there is no debate in the news. Journalists often criticize the execution of U.S. policy, but fail to offer critical analysis of the policy itself if actors inside the government have not challenged it. Mermin ultimately offers concrete evidence of outside-Washington perspectives that could have been reported in specific cases, and explains how the press could increase its independence of Washington in reporting foreign policy news. The author constructs a new framework for thinking about press-government relations, based on the observation that bipartisan support for U.S. intervention is often best interpreted as a political phenomenon, not as evidence of the wisdom of U.S. policy. Journalists should remember that domestic political factors often influence foreign policy debate. The media, Mermin argues, should not see a Washington consensus as justification for downplaying critical perspectives.